Sunday, November 17, 2013

Evan Fugazzi is a fantastic painter and friend. I think of his paintings as possessing something of a ying and yang -- they are serious while playful, abstracted while representational, architectural while atmospheric. But they are really good, no counterbalance to that adjective. But we have discussed the good, the bad and the ugly of paintings of ours, others and the painting life in general over the last four years.

Evan did his M.F.A. at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and resided and worked in Philadelphia afterwards, so we had been able to maintain a dialogue pretty easily. This semester he was awarded with a residency at the University of South Carolina, where he teaches and works in the studio provided (above).

I have been dying to see the work he is making which is part of his upcoming solo show, Adjust Accordingly, at Gross McCleaf opening December 6th. I had some questions for him about the work and his experience with the residency and thought it would be a great accompaniment to the work to provide a bit of an interview. I am so looking forward to seeing his show (the works in person are so rich) and having his presence back in Philly again. Take a look below at the paintings and his insightful words on the studio process below:

A Mild Fear of Dying, 2013, Oil on Linen, 48 x 40 inches

Birthmarks, 2013, Oil on Linen, 8 x 10 inches

Jumps, 2013, Oil on Linen, 50 x 54 inches

Runner's Legs, 2013, Oil on Linen, 18 x 20 inches

Turn Me Over, 2013, Oil on Linen, 18 x 20 inches

The Earth Eats, 2013, Oil on Linen, 40 x 48 inches

Your work has moved from representational to increasingly abstract.
Do you still look to things you see in the world for inspiration?
Or is it more of a formal process happening on the canvas?

I think I can describe two lines of
exploration but they are blurred and I’m sure there are more conflicting
impulses to be found. I am exploring having a raised awareness of the
abstraction inherent in making works and am engaging it more directly. Simultaneously,
maybe at my work’s detriment, I don’t know, I have explored what I make when
open to pulling from intuition, memory, evocation, and unfolding discovered
relationships.

Do you want or care if viewers recognize imagery in the work?

I think finding meaning is a sign of our
humanity. I think we look for it and find it and that it takes care of itself.
I hope my works are rich in the respect that they are opportunities for the
viewer to make connections and find their own meaning. I‘m not so worried if
they find the same meaning as me. If I am a looking at work that beats me over
the head with too obvious of intentions, I stop looking. It starts to slide
towards propaganda for me. Some days I wish I could be more clear, direct, or obvious
but then I think I’d get bored.

You have recently moved to an artist in residence in South Carolina.
Has the change in scenery/environment/studio affected your work?
And how?

I have bigger windows and a larger
studio. I also sleep and eat in the same room as my work. There’s no getting
away from it unless I turn them to the wall or leave. It’s like I suddenly went
from having roommates down the hall to sharing my room with 15 people. And so it’s
helping me see them differently as they are being made.

I’m also living in a building that moves
between audible extremes. Some days it’s absolutely silent so much so that I
can hear the building respond to the weather. Creaking, groaning… ghosts in the
halls. Heating up metal, moving slowly; things settling. Other times there are
wedding receptions downstairs, or a church service early in the morning, or burlesque
show where I can feel the bass shake the building. So I feel like I’m now
exploring more directly how visually loud or quiet my works can be. Maybe I paint
the quiet ones when I want quiet and vice versa. Or the opposite, I haven’t
seen a pattern yet.

There are also different colors, plants,
people, sounds, and mannerisms all around me. Everything is both familiar and different, but
not completely. I’ve found that useful for my work.

What artists are you looking at most recently?

Since I’m teaching a couple of drawing
classes at a university while I’m here, I’ve been looking at drawings with a
greater appetite. Diebenkorn, DeKooning, Morandi, Ellsworth Kelly, Francesca
Woodman’s photography, and continuing a constant fascination with Kimura. That’s just a few of them. I try to balance
looking at work I enjoy and work I can learn from and works that challenge me.
Sometimes I use those works to give myself visual pep talks. Remind myself why
I paint. My students’ work is probably the most impactful though.

How do you see your work? And the next two questions I am asking because
I ask myself them recently. Do you feel your work builds on itself
linearly or are there multiple roads it is simultaneously going down?

Maybe some day I’ll be able to answer
this question. I might begin to formulate an answer about the work I was doing 3
years ago, but only just now. It’s still very close and I’m just now starting
to see it with any semblance of objectivity. My intentions and my expectations
cloud that vision. I can tell you what I’m interested in and what fuels the
work. Maybe I can say that they’re like
recorded conversations. Some are chitchats at a coffee shop and some are those
conversations that happen late at night after two people have spent a lot of
time together. I think I have varied interests and conflicting desires and they
show up in different proportions in different works. I think being surprised by
my work is a good thing. I don’t know if I’m making any progress.

How do you think about the notion of revision and when a painting is
complete? Some of your work is very labored over where you must take the
painting through many stages. And some seem much quicker. I think
many times a painter's process is one or the other mode, how do you think about
this?

I don’t worry if a painting is complete;
I just ask myself if it’s strong enough to survive out there in the world but I
don’t know if this is a good question to be asking. They can all be worked on
more. I just might not know what to do yet. If I did; then I’d probably do it. Occasionally,
I know exactly what needs to happen next but if I am brave I won’t do it. I’ll
leave some room for someone else to look and engage the work.

I’m not sure more time spent on a canvas
is helpful. Sometimes it is and sometimes it isn’t. Sometimes I ask myself if
I’m just trying to make the painting different, or intensify what is there. Either
is valid to me, but I want to ask myself those questions.

But I like to paint. If I have enough
surfaces and if I’m paying some sort of attention then I can let myself have
fast paintings and slow paintings and some that just sit.

I just hope they are in a fertile place
when I stop working on them.

How has or has getting ready for the solo show affected what’s happening
in your studio or in your head?

I like accountability and the
consequences. I have this time and I have to put something up on the walls. I’m
guaranteed it won’t look like I wanted it to look. I get to ask myself if I’m playing it safe or
taking the risks I need to take. But at the same time I remind myself that
making work and showing work are two different processes. Different
opportunities to make decisions and choices. There are a lot of things in my
studio that show very different interests. Sometime I think ‘will they like
it?’ and then I don’t know who this “they” is. Will my mom like it? Yeah, most
likely. What about everyone else? I don’t know what anyone else would like and
I’d rather not spend my time thinking about it. As I’m wrapping up the work,
I’m learning what I wished I had known before I made the paintings but that’s
how it works for me.

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I am a painter born and living in Philadelphia. I started this blog as a way to organize and collect my own sources of inspiration, and reflect on my experiences looking at and making paintings. With so much art buzzing around the internet, I felt like carving out this little space for a particular type of seeing and making, and drawing connections between them.